From his New York skyscraper, President
Donald Trump should have felt on top of the world. Instead, scandal over
his alleged shakedown of Ukraine's president for dirt on an opponent
has brought him to the lowest point of his presidency -- and at risk of
crashing further.
The former real estate tycoon and reality TV performer returned to
Washington on Thursday as only the fourth president to face an
impeachment inquiry.
On Twitter, he raged at the "hoax" and "scam." Aides insisted that the story was meaningless.
But in reality, this was the week when Trump was confronted in brutal
fashion by the limits of his power, or even his ability to project that
power.
Tuesday saw him boasting in front of the United Nations about what he
called a historic peak in American military and economic might.
Yet diplomats in the UN hall were all too aware of his meager diplomatic victories and mounting domestic troubles.
Iran remains a combustible, unsolved affair, with frantic efforts by
French President Emmanuel Macron to facilitate a meeting between Trump
and Iran's President Hassan Rouhani coming to naught.
The China trade war rolls on. Attempts to force out Venezuela's leftist
strongman Nicolas Maduro have failed. North Korea is not giving up
nuclear weapons.
By coincidence, Trump's new British ally, Prime Minister Boris Johnson,
plunged into fresh political turmoil back home this week, while Trump's
old ally, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, was struggling to survive
the aftermath of Israel's election.
Now Trump had a political maelstrom of his own, with Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi announcing the start of a formal impeachment probe on
Tuesday -- lighting a rocket under the already explosive 2020
presidential campaign.
- Wounded and defiant -
It wasn't meant to be like this.
New York is Trump's hometown and he travels the Big Apple like a modern-day emperor.
Everywhere he goes, his gargantuan, heavily armed motorcade requires
swaths of one of the planet's busiest cities to shut down. Residents
become spectators to the sheer potency of the presidential office.
And at night, Trump is escorted to his very own skyscraper. Trump Tower
on the corner of Fifth Avenue is a monument to a man who has always
believed in, and proclaimed, his greatness.
Yet as the week progressed, the view from that penthouse eyrie became grimmer. The man looking down became angrier.
Few Americans had ever thought much about Ukraine, let alone its new
president, Volodymyr Zelensky, who, like Trump, used to work in
television entertainment.
Suddenly the allegation that Trump twisted Zelensky's arm to prosecute a
corruption case against Joe Biden, the Democratic frontrunner for 2020,
made Ukraine practically the only topic of discussion in Washington.
As impeachment talk swelled, Trump agreed to release a transcript of a
lengthy phone call he had with Zelensky. He then authorized release of
the complaint by the intelligence community whistleblower who'd raised
the alarm in the first place.
The White House said these documents killed the story.
"He has nothing to hide," spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham said on Thursday.
- 'It was all planned' -
But for Democrats and even a few from Trump's ultra-loyal Republican party, the documents amounted to smoking guns.
The intensifying scandal turned Trump into an ever lonelier, downbeat figure.
Usually his press conferences are stunning performances, filled with
bragging, joking, storytelling and, above all, a willingness to take on
any question.
At times, Trump takes so many questions that journalists are visibly exhausted.
On Wednesday, though, he ascended the podium to launch into a rambling
monologue of over 20 minutes before taking just a few questions.
It was a speech delivered in a flat voice, filled with an air of hurt.
"So many leaders came up to me today and they said, sir, what you go through, no president has ever gone through," he said.
Trump has always prided himself on his ability to sell and persuade. His
most famous book, ghostwritten, is even called "The Art of the Deal."
But these few days in New York have left the man with answers to every question stumbling, and reaching for conspiracy theories.
"It was all planned," Trump said grimly. "That was all planned like everything else."
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